Some of us can.
If your round chambers with ease, there is enough clearance to safely fire the round.
Truth and facts in tonys book that can actually be reproducedTony Boyer's book: "The Book of Rifle Accuracy" makes for a much better "mentor guide" then Dave Scott's article: "Secrets of the Warehouse", in my opinion, that's oppositions are more modern in terms of current day technology, proven results, and accuracy contributes.
Most shooters can't measure .00035 much less in someplace they can't see. The Houston warehouse article was a great article, I've read it many times.
Did Tony speak to 'reloading without sizing the neck'?
The subject at hand
Boyer did not. On page 155 of his book, he states "Well maintained cases are one of the obvious things you needed to maintain peak accuracy.Three areas to watch are headspace, overall length and neck tension"
In Neck Tension (pg 158 & 159) he turns necks for .0025 to .0045 neck tension using a bushing die, assuming .0005 spring back in new, factory annealed brass.
This spring back is what Virgil King made use of in his case prep, only he held clearances to .00075 to the chamber wall. In his study, he eliminated the sizing of the brass as a variable that is hard to control once brass has been worked a few times. As I recall, he got about 25 cycles out of the brass before neck tension became unreliable due to brass work hardening.
Therefore, to answer the OP's question, yes, you can do without sizing necks if you also prep the case to make use of springback and your chamber is appropriately cut.
Otherwise, a loose bullet in the case can become a problem if ejecting a live round AND you're seating bullets into the lands. The bullet can remain lodged in the barrel and spilled powder will be your clue to stop and remedy the situation before continuing on, otherwise a barrel burst is likely.
Hope I'm not overstepping, but "fitted necks" are discussed in The Ulimate in Rifle Accuracy by Glenn Newick in the chapter on case preparation. He doesn't recommend for or against it but apparently it was used by some competitors in the 80's. He does state that done incorrectly it can be dangerous.@mikecr - yes, I have the book. No he does not speak to: "reloading without sizing the neck".
Let me know of any books/literature on that topic (but only if the contents extend into benchrest accuracy (particularly LR-BR)).
For fitted I maintain 0.0005" total. The chamber neck itself expands some tiny amount, maybe ~0.0001-0.0002", but I've set my neck thickness high enough to spring back this 0.0007" total.Keep in mind that .00035 is per side - so .0007" total clearance on the diameter. That's enough clearance to fit a precisely turned neck into without any interference.
@mikecr -
With your method you describe to "fitted necks", how many shots in a string can you shoot before the brass spring back consistency is effected and depleting? And doesn't the ambient temperature also limit the string size for spring back consistency?
What I remember from "back in the day" those that played with "fitted necks" expressing that barrel/chamber heat played a big role to brass spring back consistency, greatly limiting there string sizes (which was also ambient dependent).
Actual witnessed zeros have been shot in the beggs tunnel. You ought to study up on what has been done there if you want some good reading. Fitted necks are not really what people are led to believe- theres one step always left out and thats what will keep people from getting hurt and thats the inside neck boring that slip fits the bullet at exactly zero touch on a step.I and a bunch of people were shooting fitted necks in Registered BR in the mid 80's. It is a lot of work to say the least. I and shooting buddies ran .0002 clearance on a loaded round. Chambers had to be measured with gauge pins to assure that the reamer had not cut under size or over size. Reamer design regarding radius of neck and shoulder became a topic of major concern. Cleaning brass necks with steel wool was a no no.
Constant chamber cleaning, brass flow, was a nightmare. At the time, we figured we were duplicating what the "talking heads" were doing to achieve the ultimate accuracy in the Warehouse.
In a short time, about 6 months, I abandoned the process as my aggs were going up. We were still agging .210 or less, but that was not good enough, and I felt un accounted flyers were killing us all following the procedure.
I went back to a .001 total clearance on a loaded round, and I felt like my aggs improved sizing with Wilson bushings.